The Herald (South Africa)

University academic year may extend into next year

- Tamar Kahn

Universiti­es may have to extend the academic year into the first quarter of next year due to the disruption caused by Covid-19, a developmen­t likely to create new financing pressures on the government, parliament heard yesterday.

Schools and higher education institutio­ns were ordered to close before the government imposed a national lockdown on March 27.

The department of higher education and training is working closely with institutio­ns to reorganise teaching to ensure students can complete the programme planned for the academic year, but it is possible their work will have to roll over into next year, the department’s deputy director-general for university education, Diane Parker, said.

Extending the academic year would mean extending support for hundreds of thousands of students who depend on the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), the government conduit for financing free higher education for students from poor and working-class families.

“Students are being funded during this period by NSFAS, but we recognise with the extension of the academic year there may be need to extend support into the first quarter of 2021, and that may have financial implicatio­ns,” Parker said.

Modelling work is under way to determine the financial implicatio­ns of a longer 2020 academic year, she said.

Universiti­es were planning to resume their academic programme by May 4, using online teaching platforms, she said, but they were only likely to resume traditiona­l contact lectures when SA had passed its Covid-19 peak, which could be as late as September.

“We need to have a phasedin resumption of campus activity, and each institutio­n is looking at which types of teaching and learning need to be phased in and how,” she said.

Universiti­es were considerin­g a range of options, including the provision or loan of laptops, delivering hard-copy learning materials and data sticks and creating learning sites for students who do not have network access or appropriat­e space at home.

Parker warned that some universiti­es may come under financial pressure from the loss of tuition fees and accommodat­ion income due to the lockdown and a potentiall­y protracted resumption of normal activities.

Providing online learning carried high start up costs.

While the majority of students had returned home before the lockdown began, almost 6,300 students remained on university campuses.

They had been provided with food and hygiene products, and essential services were continuing on campuses, Parker said.

The majority of the students are internatio­nal students or postgradua­tes.

The department’s chief director for Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) colleges, Aruna Singh, said only 17 out of the sector’s 50 institutio­ns were offering online learning.

Lecturers are making extensive use of WhatsApp to communicat­e with students, as most learning is textbook-based.

 ??  ?? POPULAR INSTITUTIO­N: Wits University
POPULAR INSTITUTIO­N: Wits University

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